Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:04):
It's that time time, time, time, luck and load. The
Michael Very Show is on the air.
Speaker 2 (00:14):
And frankly, I think a lot of Republicans look at
me as like, oh, that's a straight white Christian male
son of a cop. Like everyone else like him looks
like me. So when he comes at me, it's more
betrayal to them. Like I've heard that all from them
on their side, and that's that's why they take it
so personally. But like, I'm a Christian and I don't
(00:35):
want to be defined by what Republicans think of me,
Like I don't wear it on my sleeve in my
politics like they do.
Speaker 3 (00:45):
Mobid Isshue continues to outdo California as the worst run
state in the country. Recently, the Minnesota City Council voted
twelve to one to begin the legislative process that could
lead to the legis to the legalization, sorry of adult
bathhouses and sex venues. In case you're not aware, bath
(01:09):
houses are exactly what they sound like, a gathering place
for gay men to have sex. Remember when, just strangely, oddly,
for no good reason, Joe Biden brought that up at
a CNN town hall in twenty nineteen talking about San Francisco.
Speaker 4 (01:28):
Remember Anderson back fifteen twenty years ago, we talked about
this in San Francisco is all about well, you know, gay,
gay and gay bathhouses, and it's all about round the
clock sex.
Speaker 5 (01:39):
It's all come on.
Speaker 3 (01:40):
Man, Wait what.
Speaker 5 (01:45):
What just happened? H wow? Imagine Anderson Pooper.
Speaker 3 (01:56):
Joe Biden just goes into hey, you people in your
gay bath houses.
Speaker 5 (02:00):
Remember we're talking about this. It's just around the clock.
It is bam bam.
Speaker 6 (02:03):
Man.
Speaker 5 (02:03):
It was awesome. I mean he was wonderful.
Speaker 3 (02:05):
I mean he was a wait wait you know, I mean,
come on, man, when he's when he's out on a
limb and can't figure out how to get back because
he's things. If you know, it's like he has tourettes,
but his brain, you know, has fits and starts and
he says things and things get out there. Come on, man,
we no, what what does that mean? This was the
(02:26):
CNN town Hall. Let's play that again.
Speaker 4 (02:29):
Remember Anderson back fifteen twenty years ago, we talked about
this in San Francisco is all about well, you know, gay,
gay and gay bath houses, and it's all.
Speaker 5 (02:39):
About round the clock sex.
Speaker 3 (02:40):
It's all come on, man, bathhouses had been outlawed in
Mogadi issue since nineteen eighty eight because the argument at
the time was they were a petri dish of STDs.
But if mogodi Isshu is going to legalize bathhouses, you
know Timmy Walls is ready to welcome that with open
(03:01):
arms and jazz hands.
Speaker 7 (03:03):
Hello, everybody, your boy Jimmy Waltz here letting some steam out. Literally,
I'm in the sauna with the boys, just chewing a
fat talking about fall sports like I always do. My
wonderful state of Minnesota continues to be a trailblazer when
it comes to tackling legislation. Recently, Minneapolis stepped up and
(03:24):
voted twelve to one to possibly.
Speaker 8 (03:26):
Bring back Are you ready for this, beth houses?
Speaker 5 (03:29):
That's right?
Speaker 7 (03:30):
Remember bath houses in San Francisco in the nineties.
Speaker 8 (03:33):
I sure do.
Speaker 7 (03:34):
That's where I interviewed Bruce for my assistant position. Those
were huge in the nineties. Then some guys caught a
flu or something and they closed them all down. Looks
like San Francisco is coming to Minnesota. Don't just take
it for me. All the boys in the sauna with me.
You're excited, right Jadon Liam asher Zane heck, they're all in.
Speaker 8 (03:53):
I'm tickled pink with passion about this. Guys.
Speaker 7 (03:56):
This might surprise some of you books, but I'm a
big bath guy. I am a show in gears. Nothing
better than drawing a warm bath, a glass of shardenay
and watching the Twins game or My Golden Girl, three
runs whatever. Well, gotta run, it's lag day. Gotta go
spot the boys while they do some squats show.
Speaker 3 (04:24):
Remember after the election, Timmy Waltz said that the reason
they had brought him in to be the vice presidential
running mate was because he was the one who was
going to talk to the straight white men, because they
were doing so bad in the polls with straight white
men that they brought in Timmy Wattz, What was Pete
(04:46):
butter gig unavailable?
Speaker 5 (04:49):
Good night? Well, oh you have the audio. Yeah, let's
hear it.
Speaker 9 (04:55):
And there's folks that I recognize are smarter than me.
They analyze this. You put your in in running a
campaign that had never been run before one hundred days
in the situation we were at running against a very
unusual opponent on the other.
Speaker 5 (05:08):
Side, and look, my job was to do. Look I
knew I was on the ticket. I would argue because
we did a lot of.
Speaker 9 (05:15):
Amazing progressive things in Minnesota, improved people's lives. But I
also was on the ticket quite honestly, you know, because
I could code talk to white guys watching football, fixing
their truck doing that that I could put them at ease.
I was the permission structure to say, look, you can
do this and vote for this.
Speaker 3 (05:31):
And I mean, quite honestly, you know, you know the
fellas you know, scratching themselves, you know, working on their
truck while drinking a beer and cleaning their gun during
the football game. I was a guy that was like,
hey there. I was, you know, like Gomer Pile on
(05:52):
us NMC, you know what I mean. I was a
fellow that was like, well, hey, there are you know
so I am. And I was the one that could
talk to them, you know. I was kind of the
white man whisperer, you know what I mean.
Speaker 5 (06:04):
You know what I mean.
Speaker 3 (06:05):
I'd go in there and I'd be like, hey, fellaws, listen,
I know what you're thinking. Kamala is a woman. And
on those women, holl they're so crazy, those women, you know,
I mean, And and she's black or Indian or whatever.
We're saying this week. I know, and you know she's
from San Francisco and now that's weird already. Okay, and
you know she was a mistress of Willie Brown and
okay that's not.
Speaker 5 (06:25):
Good either, you know what I'm saying. And uh she's crazy.
But I mean who among us hasn't known her crazy?
Speaker 6 (06:32):
What?
Speaker 10 (06:32):
Mon?
Speaker 11 (06:32):
Am? I? Right?
Speaker 5 (06:33):
Fellas? Can I can I get an amen on that one?
And so anyway, if you could just vote for usaid
I mean, because I mean, here's the dell.
Speaker 3 (06:41):
I'm an old ball coach, you know, I mean, Now
there are allegations okay that I had a little sandusky
and mirror they had a little sand dusky in them,
you know what I mean?
Speaker 5 (06:50):
And uh so, yes, and I went to China.
Speaker 3 (06:53):
You know, I have a very troubling history of going
to China and talking about China and frankly lathering up
over Tima on being hones and and uh yeah, but
I mean who among us, you know, who among us
hadn't wanted to you know, do that or something?
Speaker 5 (07:07):
You know what I mean?
Speaker 3 (07:07):
But listen, guys, look, we're gonna make the whole nation
like mogodis shoe. You know what I'm saying, we're gonna
have Somemalie fraud everywhere. We're gonna have uh, you know,
it's it's just basically gonna be just like Mogodi shoe,
you know, and you're gonna really like it. And uh
and so that's why I'm there. So don't you worry, Okay.
(07:29):
You know, if you're thinking, oh, Kamala, she's a left
wing nutty woman, liberal progressive ho from San Francisco, don't
worry about that. You'll have your old buddy tim here,
your old hunting buddy, you old shotgun Timmy. You know
what I mean, Old shotgun Timmy, the friend of China
that knows school shooters.
Speaker 5 (07:49):
I become friends with school shooters. You got old Timmy here.
You know what I mean, You got old Timmy.
Speaker 3 (07:54):
As long as you got Timmy on your side, you know,
just vote for us, and don't worry about that old
crazy he Trump.
Speaker 5 (08:00):
Oh he's a crazy follow that that that guy, you.
Speaker 3 (08:03):
Know what I mean. And they're telling me Bob Fosse's
making the musical all my life, you know what I'm saying.
Speaker 5 (08:08):
And so I'm here. I'm here for you me. You
we got this, okay, this is us me you us men.
You know that's that's us men folk, one thingful a lot.
Speaker 3 (08:16):
In the fact.
Speaker 5 (08:17):
And so U vote for Kamla because the vote for
Kamla has a vote for me. And I'm just like you.
I don't care if somebody dicus fakes you. You can't
shoot at Michael's.
Speaker 3 (08:30):
Earlier this year, President Trump signed the Whole Milk for
Healthy Kids Act for this is another of the Robert F.
Kennedy MAHA Make America Health Again, Healthy Again movement, which
brought whole milk back to schools.
Speaker 5 (08:49):
You know, you can take a lot of these subjects.
Speaker 3 (08:55):
And you say to yourself, I'm fifty five, so you
can measure yourself based on that. The diet I ate
at eight years old was healthier than people eat today.
But in the intervening forty seven years, that diet was demeaned, insulted, humiliated,
(09:18):
scoffed at, scare used as scare tactics. You take anything,
any single item that you ate, and chances are quote
unquote conventional health, conventional medicine, conventional.
Speaker 5 (09:35):
Media told you that it was horrible for you and
you should cut it from your diet.
Speaker 3 (09:44):
And to a te the items they told you to
replace it with were far far worse for you, or
were bad for you when the original thing wasn't real fat.
Oh got to cut fat from our diet. Let me
tell you something. You could put a camera on Chad knockanish.
(10:04):
We may do it without you knowing it, without him
knowing it, and you could follow Chad Knock andishe and
if he does it, it's a longevity tool, it's a
health and wellness tool. If he doesn't do it, you
shouldn't either. But there's a lot of people morbidly OBEs
who if I told you what his daily regre, I
not do that. It's crazy. It's absolutely crazy. The number
(10:30):
of people I know yesterday, Billy and Connie Stagner came
over last night. A lot of people don't know this.
Billy Stagner is one of the healthy human beings you'll
ever meet. And he's like seventy five. He works out
twice a day. Billy has started, you know, I'm at
an age where we sit around and talk about our
healthcare hacks. And he puts heavy whipping cream into his
(10:53):
morning coffee to build up his fat levels because he
doesn't get enough fat in his diet. I know, hard
to believe red meat. Remember red meat was so bad
for you. Oh, red meat was the end of the world.
You don't want red meat. Turns out red meat's really
good for you. And most Americans are getting a protein deficiency.
(11:14):
Almost every American if you subscribe to the one gram
of protein per pound that you weigh, then almost every
American is getting it has a protein deficiency. Whole milk protein.
You could just go item butter. All those butter substitutes.
(11:36):
Guess what they were, terrible, real butter good for you?
Speaker 5 (11:41):
Who knew? Who knew? President Trump signed the whole meal.
Speaker 3 (11:47):
Oh coffee, So I've been I've switched from reading about
sleep and heart to liver. Turns out the studies show
that coffee is good for liver health. Coffee was caffeine.
Speaker 5 (12:05):
It was terrible.
Speaker 3 (12:06):
Cut the coffee. And so people that don't And then
here's the worst one. The worst one is people who
tell me.
Speaker 5 (12:12):
I don't know what to do.
Speaker 3 (12:13):
You can't leave anything. Yeah, you're an adult, think for yourself.
Seems like a good thing. Whole milk for kids.
Speaker 5 (12:23):
No one could argue that right.
Speaker 3 (12:25):
Well. While speaking at an event in February, Oregon, Congressman
Maxine Dexter compared white milk in schools with white supremacy.
Speaker 5 (12:31):
You can't make this up.
Speaker 10 (12:33):
Please ask for the science based regiments, not whatever our
a junior is getting kickbacks on, or you know whatever
whole milk white supremacy dog was swing that's happening right now.
I'm getting a little too political.
Speaker 5 (12:50):
But let me tell you something.
Speaker 3 (12:54):
Everything that these NPR leftist white weasel liberals, soy milk types,
is for is bad for you. That's why they all
have allergies. That's why they all need therapists. They're mentally
and physically unwell. You take old Jim working in the
oil field. I guarantees a hundred times healthier than them
(13:15):
eating red meat and whatever the hell else he wants.
Speaker 5 (13:18):
White milk is like white supremacy. That sound like a
good topic for NPR. The following program is only made
possible by contributions from listeners like you.
Speaker 8 (13:29):
Hello, and welcome to soft voices, hard truths. My apologies,
I'm a little charged up today. I'm your host, Wesley Cardigan.
In a nation reckoning with its past, a new question
kurdles to the surface. Is white milk racist for generations?
It's been poured without question, cold pale, unchallenged, but critics
(13:52):
now argue white milk isn't just a beverage, it's a narrative,
one that centers blandness as a virtue. Because cows were
told are listening, Cows raised exclusively by white male farmers,
often within what one active is described as pasture adjacent
power structures, continue to produce white milk, predictable, monochromatic, some
(14:12):
say the milk of choice for white supremacists, but shift
the environment and the other responds. Cows raised by people
of color are now reportedly producing chocolate milk straight from
the source, no powders, no syrups, just lived experience free
from the shackles.
Speaker 7 (14:29):
Of white supremacy.
Speaker 8 (14:30):
One farmer described it as reparations you can pour over
cereal and in LGBTQ plus farming collectives, cows are producing
a fruity milk, naturally being lightly sweet strawberry milk, and
according to one non binary Holstein finally seen. The dairy
industry insists milk is milk, but critics ask who decided
(14:51):
that and why does two percent feel like patriarchy? Researchers
are now exploring oat milk, which identifies as dairy adjacent
but re fuses labels. For now, Americans are left to
confront an uncomfortable truth. The next time you open your fridge,
you may not just be choosing milk. You may be
choosing racism.
Speaker 7 (15:12):
I must remind you that following this program, Cedar Rain
will show you the benefits of building tiny.
Speaker 8 (15:17):
Homes out of reclaimed wood.
Speaker 10 (15:19):
Thank you for.
Speaker 8 (15:19):
Listening to our little program where the only thing hard
is the truth and the only thing soft is the voices.
Oh wait, that doesn't seem right.
Speaker 3 (15:29):
A crazy liberal woman in Illinois wanted to become the
new celebrity of the left, so she did what they do.
Speaker 5 (15:39):
She faked being a victim.
Speaker 3 (15:42):
She claimed that she was detained by ice and held
at a county jail in Wisconsin. It became a national story,
but it was all part of an elaborate hoax. Notice
how often this happens. It turns out that bad things
happening there aren't enough of them. There's not enough supply
(16:05):
to fulfill the demand, so they just make it up.
The sheriff in the county she claimed she was being
held in is fighting back and suing her for defamation.
Speaker 5 (16:16):
Good on you, Sheriff. The story from CBS Chicago.
Speaker 2 (16:20):
She was detained for thirty hours and it's just completely unacceptable.
Speaker 12 (16:25):
In March, supporters of Sunny Nacbe decried her alleged detainment
by federal immigration authorities. The twenty eight year old Skoche
women claimed she and five others returned from a work
trip in Turkey in March fifth and were held by
Customs and Border Protection at Ohare Airport for thirty hours,
moved to the Broadview Detention facility, and then to the
Dodge County jail. The story sparked outcry we raised critical
(16:46):
mass here and protests for her narrative was disputed by
the Department of Homeland Security, which released surveillance images they
say shows she was able to leave O'Hare about ninety
minutes after she landed.
Speaker 11 (16:57):
They have not been supported by any any verified evidence
at all.
Speaker 12 (17:02):
In a news conference Friday, Dodge County Sheriff Dale Schmidt
released surveillance videos, documents, and text messages he says refutes
knock these claims.
Speaker 11 (17:11):
At no point was sundask Knackvie in the custody of
the Dodge County Sheriff's office.
Speaker 12 (17:16):
Schmidt showed a guestfolio that appears to show Knafee checked
into a hotel in Rosemont about three hours after she
landed at O'Hare on March fifth. He also showed surveillance
video that appears to show Knafee was driven to the
deeper Dan Wisconsin and back to Chicago land on March
seventh by an ex boyfriend. The sheriff says the ex
boyfriend told him he gave Nakhee about twenty five thousand
(17:37):
dollars over weeks, including for her flight to Turkey. Knac
Vie's story, Schmid says, damage his agency's reputation.
Speaker 11 (17:44):
I don't have any charges here in Dodge County to
bring against her. My only recourse is to make sure
that the public knows that she can't do this.
Speaker 12 (17:55):
We attempted to reach Nakfee at her home, but no
one answered.
Speaker 5 (17:58):
I think it's very, very rare.
Speaker 6 (18:00):
In fact, this is the first time I've heard of
a county sheriff in their individual capacity, filed defamation suit
against claims that were made against them.
Speaker 12 (18:08):
Julius Kim is an attorney in southeastern Wisconsin. He says
time and resources to prosecute defamation cases means it's rare
for such cases to be brought by law enforcement.
Speaker 6 (18:17):
When we deal with public figures, there's an extra burden,
an extra standard debt he has to overcome, and that
is he has to show that the person who defamed
him did it with actual malice.
Speaker 12 (18:27):
Sheriffhmid is also SAYINGCA County Commissioner Kevin Morrison, a family
friend of these, who voiced support in press conferences and
echoed knock these claims. He said in a statement he
could not comment on pending litigation.
Speaker 3 (18:41):
A defamation case like that, as they briefly noted, against
a public figure, is very difficult to prove, and for
good reason. It should be, because we want you to
feel comfortable criticizing our own government in this country.
Speaker 5 (19:05):
Because that's what freedom of speech looks like.
Speaker 3 (19:11):
Our culture is based on the idea of competing interests clashing. Hey,
public official, you can do something stupid, but you're going
to be criticized for it, and then you're going to
have to run for election again, and that criticism is
(19:32):
going to be out there.
Speaker 5 (19:33):
So that's one of the ways, in.
Speaker 3 (19:35):
Addition to law enforcement and administrative proceed that we build in,
we build in some checks and balances to the system.
So for a governmental entity in this case the sheriff
and the sheriff's department, to file a case for defamation
by this woman against them she defamed them, the standard
(19:59):
is much high, but it's not the case that it
can't ever be met. The standard requires, at least in
the state of Texas, that you are aware that what
you're saying is not true.
Speaker 5 (20:15):
So if you call Chris Christy a big fat, blubbering idiot,
he is in fact a big fat blubbering and you
can prove it. Right.
Speaker 3 (20:27):
If you accuse someone of doing something, truth is the defense.
So if you accuse someone of accusing you falsely, defaming you,
harming your reputation wrongly, all they have to do to
(20:48):
dismiss your case is show that it's true or that
they believed it was true.
Speaker 5 (20:55):
Now here's the part where it gets hard.
Speaker 3 (20:58):
So if you say, if you're the sheriff and you
say you defamed me, you hurt my reputation with this statement,
and the person says I believed it to be true,
the standard is on you to prove that they didn't. Well,
in this case, you can meet that standard. She knows
(21:21):
she wasn't wrongfully arrested. She wasn't even arrested or held.
She knows that because she was there. She made it
all up. So when she made the claim, she has
no real defense. She made the claim. Whether or not
(21:43):
she intended to defame the sheriff would be her argument.
Her claim would be she was out of her mind,
she didn't know what she was doing. Her claim could
be she was under duress, she was doing irrational things,
she was under the influence of mind altering drugs. I mean,
these are the sorts of things you've got to cook up.
(22:06):
Because there is no doubt she wasn't detained. That's going
to be proven pretty easily. And she did say those things,
so you start from there. So the case to defend
her is going to be pretty simple in that way.
Now it's also going to be to her defense. I
don't know what her financial status is, so you might
(22:28):
very well get her to plead out to having defamed you,
But your damages in that defamation aren't going to be
met because she didn't.
Speaker 5 (22:38):
Have any money.
Speaker 3 (22:38):
I don't know if she has any money or not,
but it might be getting blood from a turnip. Nevertheless,
it might be worth it for this sheriff to do
it to prove the point. That's a trophy, right, that's
a scalp for his wall. This woman said this about me,
and it's not true, and she knew it wasn't true.
(23:02):
And I'm not simply going to allow it to stand.
I'm going to make there be consequences for that, beyond
the shame that she should suffer but doesn't have the
good sense to So maybe for that reason he does.
Speaker 6 (23:17):
I like it.
Speaker 3 (23:19):
It's a high standard to meet, but it's the kind
of case that very well could meet it. Now, getting
any damages, getting an actual compensation financially for it, that's
probably less likely.
Speaker 5 (23:32):
But maybe she has some assets. I don't know.
Speaker 3 (23:35):
If nothing else, she forced her into bankruptcy. If nothing else,
you show other people out there like that that there
are going to be real consequences for you doing these
sorts of things. And that's part of the problem is
nobody thinks there are real customers each.
Speaker 13 (23:50):
IV spooky VAGINOSI Michael Ferry Sinning with your naked bod
is evil and atrocious.
Speaker 5 (24:00):
Twenty four was such an interesting year in politics. You
had Robert F.
Speaker 3 (24:06):
Kennedy Junior running as a Democrat, and the Kennedy name
is the gold standard for Democrats camelot. From nineteen sixty on,
you had John F. Kennedy, the president who won the
White House back from the Republicans after eight years of
(24:28):
Republican reigned under Eisenhower.
Speaker 5 (24:32):
You had a young, good looking president with.
Speaker 3 (24:36):
A beautiful wife who spoke multiple languages, and these adorable kids.
And he's assassinated and that inno sense is martyr right,
and the whole nation was weeping. My mother would tell
the story anytime you asked about.
Speaker 10 (24:54):
Her.
Speaker 5 (24:54):
Coach. I just forgot his name. He was the baseball
coach there.
Speaker 3 (24:58):
Ronnie Ronnie Anderson, Coach Anderson announcing to the class that
you know, people remember where they were when when John F. Kennedy,
When Jack Kennedy was assassinated, and therefore he was martyred.
And and you had his attorney, his Attorney General, Bobby Kennedy,
who was seen as this do gooder, well rough around
(25:20):
the edges, but do gooder. He was trying to take
down the mafia, and he was trying to trying to
do the right thing. And they had their civil rights
suge and okay, that was portrayed. This you know this,
this golden era. And then in sixty eight, at the
last minute, you've got Robert Kennedy. He's going Bobby Kennedy,
He's going to run for president and save the day.
(25:43):
Of course, he's assassinated by sir hands. Sir hand, Rosie
Greer didn't didn't do his job, and he's assassinated in
California in the kitchen, and he was starting to pick
up momentum. I don't know that he would have won
the nomination. I think he was too far behind in
the UH in the delegate vote, but it makes for
a good story that he was their guy. And then
you've got Teddy and Chapiquittick and he's kind of the screwball,
(26:08):
but even he can to be known as the lion
of the Senate and some people like Ted Kennedy whatever.
So you got the Kennedy's and then you got the
sister and Arnold Schwarzen there. But here comes Bobby. Here
comes Robert F.
Speaker 5 (26:19):
Kennedy Jr.
Speaker 3 (26:21):
And he is this fascinating cat that they shut down
the Democrat primaries. They don't hold a Democrat primary in
twenty twenty four because the incumbent President, Joe Biden can't speak,
he can't think, he can't finish the sentence, and what
are we going to do? Bobby Kennedy might meet him,
(26:44):
there's some others who might meet him.
Speaker 5 (26:46):
So Robert F. Kennedy Junior is out there running and
the Democrat establishment is just trying to ignore him. It's awkward,
it's weird.
Speaker 3 (26:58):
And then of course they smother Biden out in a
slide Kamala ind at the end.
Speaker 5 (27:04):
And what does Robert F.
Speaker 3 (27:04):
Kennedy Junior do? He realizes there's no place left for
him the Democrat Party. He realizes his message is make
America healthy again. Thing is best suited in a Trump administration.
Do they agree on everything? No, but a stroke of
genius by President Trump.
Speaker 14 (27:24):
Well, Robert F.
Speaker 3 (27:25):
Kennedy Junior chose as his running mate when he was
running for president a woman named Nicole Shanahan, and she
was the ex wife of Sergey Brinn, who's a billionaire,
and she got a pretty good pennion out of the
deal as well, and she funded the Kennedy campaign. Had
(27:45):
the chance to meet her through Mary Tally Boden, who
was a whistleblower during the whole COVID eron she's a doctor.
She treated a lot of COVID patients, saved a lot
of lives. She's written a book, by the way, about it.
Now that I encourage you to get Mary Tally Boden Bowden,
I encourage you to read her book. It is It
is wonderful. I have her book here. Let me get
(28:06):
the name right. It's called Dangerous Misinformation. Dangerous Misinformation has
just come out. It's already on the New York Times
Best Star list. But anyway, Nicole Shanahan was the was
the money behind Robert F. Kennedy's campaign. He brings her
in as his vice presidential running mate, and here she
(28:26):
talks about she talks to The Blaze about Klaus Schwab's
view of the world and how they used the wives
of tech moguls to usher in what they call the
Great Reset. And you get these wives of tech moguls
who can control hundreds of millions of dollars, and they
came at her and she doesn't like it, and she
(28:47):
has spoken out about it when other wives of tech
moguls haven't. It's a longer clip than we normally play,
but I think you will agree it's well worth it.
Speaker 13 (28:55):
What happened around the pandemic is that this whole other segment.
But I don't think many of the tech mafia wives
realize is that they were used to set the groundwork
for what was called like the reset, what it's called
generally as like the Reset by the Klaus.
Speaker 14 (29:17):
Schwabs, like the Great Reset, the Great Reset.
Speaker 10 (29:20):
Yeah.
Speaker 14 (29:20):
They I mean they openly talk about this Great Reset.
Speaker 10 (29:22):
Yeah.
Speaker 13 (29:23):
So the tech wive mafias, I believe, were kind of
being conscripted in many ways and their money, especially as
being conscripted in.
Speaker 14 (29:32):
To set the groundwork for the Great Reset. Yeah, specifically
through specifically through a network of non NGEO.
Speaker 13 (29:48):
Advisors, relationship with Hollywood, relationship with Davos and their own companies.
So if you look at like who's on these boards,
who hangs out with each other, how these culture, how
the culture of tech wealth works, like Silicon Valley tech wealth,
(30:11):
and that small group of people responsible for a huge
amount of money and a huge amount of and geo
activity across the United States. It's a really small group
of people, and it's a really small group of people
making these decisions. Yeah, and then and then completely blind
to everything else that's going on, and how their groundwork
(30:33):
is being used to then enable these other policies, these
great reset policies. You know, what this group of women
doesn't realize is that in their haste, these women are
all very busy. They have multiple properties, they have tons
of staff, they have staff issues, chronic staff issues, Their
(30:58):
kids are busy, their kids often times have some health
issues as well. A lot of them have relationship issues
with their husbands, and a lot of them themselves are
like medicated on SSRIs and antidepressants and all of that
because it's just overwhelming.
Speaker 7 (31:16):
Yeah, so.
Speaker 14 (31:19):
It's chaos. And these women find their meaning through.
Speaker 13 (31:24):
Their philanthropic work, and they find themselves like I would
find myself. That was my self worth, was my philanthropic work,
and I really believed in it. I really believed that
I was giving black communities a chance to rise up.
Speaker 14 (31:42):
Out of oppression.
Speaker 13 (31:43):
I really believe that I was helping indigenous communities rise
up out of oppression. And now that I look back
and see how all those grants performing, you know, because
my version of successes, those communities are actually uplifted.
Speaker 14 (31:56):
Yeah, not just more money pumped into them.
Speaker 13 (31:58):
Not just more money, you know, the problems of the
community have gotten worse. Crime in the community has gotten worse.
Mental health in the Native community, the Indigenous community has
gotten worse. They will even say the Indigenous community will
even say that their biggest supporters in Congress have been Republicans,
but yet they continue to vote Democrats.
Speaker 14 (32:18):
Yeah right, yeah, I mean that is that is this.
Speaker 10 (32:23):
It's like.
Speaker 13 (32:25):
The whole model is broken, the whole model makes everybody
worse off. And now we're contending with the freaking great
reset that we're now realizing is the terrible idea. Yeah,
and that many of our climate changes use are geoengineering issues.
Speaker 5 (32:44):
Yeah, well, good